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Home/ Questions/Q 5991827
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 22, 20262026-05-22T23:26:38+00:00 2026-05-22T23:26:38+00:00

I would like to replace named parameters in a string with values, like when

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I would like to replace named parameters in a string with values, like when using Python’s % operator.
Spring supports something very similar to the functionality I need with NamedParameterUtils, but for some reason it’s tightly coupled to Jdbc and replacing those named-parameters with question marks.

So, if I want to do ":a is :b" % {"a":"Java", "b":"Beautiful"} must I resort to using some heavy artillery like Velocity? or am I missing something simple?

Update: used Dmitry’s code to write my own simple version:

public static String formatSqlWithNamedParams(String sqlTemplate, Map<String, Object> params){
    StringWriter writer = new StringWriter();
    Pattern var = Pattern.compile("\\$\\{\\s*([\\w\\[\\]\\(\\)\\.]+)\\s*\\}");
    Matcher match = var.matcher(sqlTemplate);
    int offset = 0;
    while (match.find()) {
        writer.write(sqlTemplate.substring(offset, match.start()));
        String key = match.group(1);
        Object val = params.get(key);
        writer.write(val.toString());
        offset = match.end();
    }
    writer.write(sqlTemplate.substring(offset));
    return writer.toString();
}
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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-22T23:26:39+00:00Added an answer on May 22, 2026 at 11:26 pm

    It should take about 50 lines of code to write what you want.

    Here’s an excerpt from a “TrivialTemplate” I wrote a while back, which does something very similar:

    private final Pattern var = Pattern
            .compile("\\{\\s*([\\w\\[\\]\\(\\)\\.]+)\\s*\\}");
    private final PropertyUtilsBean bean = new PropertyUtilsBean();
    private final Object data;
    
    public TrivialTemplate(Object data) {
        this.data = data;
    }
    
    public void process(BufferedReader reader, PrintWriter writer) {
        String line = null;
        try {
            while ((line = reader.readLine()) != null) {
                Matcher match = var.matcher(line);
                int offset = 0;
                while (match.find()) {
                    writer.write(line.substring(offset, match.start()));
                    String key = match.group(1);
                    if (!isBlank(key)) {
                        Object val = bean.getNestedProperty(data, key
                                .toLowerCase());
                        writer.write(val != null ? val.toString() : "{null}");
                    } else {
                        writer.write("{null}");
                    }
                    offset = match.end();
                }
                writer.write(line.substring(offset));
                writer.println();
            }
        } catch (Throwable t) {
            throw new RuntimeException("template error", t);
        }
    }
    

    I’m using BeanUtils to support arbitrary data objects, but you can just as easily limit it to Maps.

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